Ryanair European cabin crew unions (including CNE/LBC from Belgium) gave the airline until 30 June 2018 to adopt national employment laws for all their workers or face industrial action during summer 2018.

Ryanair is in talks with five Ukrainian cities – likely Kharkiv, Odessa, Dnieper, Kherson, and Vinnitsa – for the opening of new routes in summer 2019. The carrier plans to review the possibility of opening a Ukrainian subsidiary, an aircraft maintenance centre and a data centre once its bases in the country are successfully operating. Cheap labour!

Ryanair recently modified its registration policy. From 13 June 2018, you will be able to register for free only from 48 hours before the flight. This means that many passengers will have to pay for the registration of their return flight (unless they leave for less than 48 hours, or have a printer at their destination, or use the mobile app). You will be able to register earlier only if you book a seat (at a cost, of course).

Another way to make ancillary money and make passengers angry, after the saga of separating people who book together?

Ryanair aims to build a substantial and profitable group of EU airlines under the Ryanair Holdings banner over the next three years, when it is likely that further Merger & Acquisitions opportunities will arise.

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary says the rising price of oil is likely to bring about the demise of numerous low-cost airlines with tight profit margins.

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary says Copenhagen will be its focal point in Scandinavia going forward, as environmental taxes on aircraft in Norway and Sweden are causing the airline to shift focus to Denmark. The airline also plans to reopen its base in Copenhagen, as the Danish government promised not to impose any such environmental taxes.

Ryanair cabin crews based in Spain, Portugal, Belgium and Italy said they would go on strike in summer 2018 unless the airline accepts their demands by a 30 June 2018 deadline. The demands include national contracts of the countries where the bases are located and the application of national labour legislation.

Ryanair officials contradicted statements by Norwegian Air Shuttle CEO Bjoern Kjos, denying that the Dublin-based carrier has ever approached the Norway-based LLC with a takeover offer.

Norwegian Air Shuttle CEO Bjoern Kjos has been playing hard-to-get in the face of a rumored takeover effort by British Airways parent company IAG. This week, however, Ryanair officials declined to be cast as a potential suitor in the starkest of possible terms.

Does anybody know how can I find out, if there was a strike between the baggage handlers, ground crew at the airport Schonefeld in Berlin on 28. March 2018?

I have made a claim to Ryanair due to the 17 hours delay. Destination: Billund (DK) - Berlin. Now 2 months later they let me know that delay was due to the strike between the baggage handlers, ground crew.

I cannot find any article or information regarding the strike on 28. March 2018. Could they have strike without informing people on public?

Ryanair to open a new base at London Southend in April 2019, with 3 based aircraft and 13 new routes including Alicante, Barcelona Reus, Bilbao, Brest, Corfu, Cluj, Dublin, Faro, Kosice, Malaga, Milan Bergamo, Palma and Venice.

CRL-WMI frequencies disappeared in september on saturdays and sundays
CRL-MAN no morning frequency in september on fridays
CRL-BGY no evening frequency in september on mondays
CRL-MAD no flights in september on saturdays